London mayoral candidate's views on Muslims land him in trouble

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Aditi Khanna, London
Published : 17:13, Oct 04, 2018 | Updated : 15:36, Oct 06, 2018

Shaun Bailey. REUTERS/FILE PHOTOThe candidate selected by Britain’s ruling Conservative Party to contest against London Mayor Sadiq Khan in the 2020 mayoral elections has come under attack for views he expressed 13 years ago regarding the country's multiculturalism.
Shaun Bailey had written a pamphlet for the Centre for Policy Studies back in 2005 in which he lamented Muslim and Hindu influence on the cultural landscape of Britain.
“You bring your children to school and they learn far more about Diwali than Christmas,” he wrote in the pamphlet titled ‘No Man’s Land’.
Bailey, a member of the London Assembly, also seemed to be confused about the difference between Hindu, the religion, and Hindi, the language, in the controversial document he had put together as a researcher with the London-based think tank.
“I speak to the people who are from Brent [north-west London] and they’ve been having Muslim and Hindi days off. What it does is rob Britain of its community. Without our community we slip into a crime-riddled cesspool,” he wrote.
The central theme of the pamphlet seemed to reflect his views that Christianity was being sidelined in the UK as a result of multiculturalism.
“There are a lot of really good things about Britain as a place and British people as a body. But by removing the religion that British people generally take to, by removing the ethics that generally go with it, we’ve allowed people to come to Britain and bring their culture, their country and any problems they might have, with them,” he wrote.
The MP, who is black, added: "Within the black community it is not such a bad thing because we've shared a religion and in many cases a language.
"It's far easier for black people to integrate. How we arrived here is different. If you talk to old black people, they will say they have been invited here by the Queen. They absolutely do not consider themselves refugees or immigrants."
The pamphlet has caused outrage among Pakistani-origin Sadiq Khan’s Labour Party colleagues, with Labour MP Virendra Sharma calling on the Conservatives to withdraw Bailey’s candidature for the 2020 local elections.
"It is appalling that in this day and age even the Tories can select a candidate for Mayor of London with views this outdated and objectionable. I don't see how Shaun Bailey can continue as candidate having written off the multiculturalism that makes London great,” said Sharma, who represents the west London constituency of Ealing and Southall.
Fellow London MP Andy Slaughter added: “It is increasingly clear that he holds views that are at best divisive and at worst Islamophobic... quite frankly we deserve much better than this from the Conservative party.”
The Tell MAMA [Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks] organisation, which records Islamophobic hate incidents in the UK, also attacked the mayoral hopeful.
"We do not tolerate such views about Muslim and Hindu communities. Nor do we tolerate any hatred or racism directed towards any other community. We will raise this further," Tell MAMA said in a statement.
A spokesperson for Bailey dismissed the attacks, saying the politician had worked with diverse communities for over 20 years and was in tune with the challenges faced by black and minority ethnic (BAME) communities in the UK.
"Whether it is working with one of London's biggest Muslim communities in North Kensington or helping young people from all communities to fulfil their potential, Shaun has always championed diverse communities. Shaun has made it his life's work to help those from migrant and disadvantaged communities, and to suggest otherwise is ludicrous,” the spokesperson said.

/pdn/
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